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HISTORICAL BOOKS

INTRODUCTIONS

OF THE

TO THE SYMBOLICAL

EVANGELICAL

LUTHERAN

CHURCH.

I. The Book of Concord, or The Concordia. 1. General

and

Particular

Symbols.

Book of Concord, or Concordia, is the title

of the Lutheran corpus doctrinae, i. e., of the symbols recognized and published under that name by the Lutheran Church. The word symbol, oóufoAlorv, is derived from the verb

ovupáAAsw,

to compare

two

things

for the

purpose of perceiving their relation and association. Z£$ufoAlorv thus developed the meaning of tessara, or sign, token, badge, banner, watehword, parole, countersign, confession, ereed. A Christian symbol, therefore, is a mark by which Christians are known. And since Christianity is essentially the belief in the truths of the Gospel, its symbol is of necessity a confession of Christian doctrine. The Church, accordingly, has from the beginning defined and regarded its symbols as a rule of faith or a rule of truth. Says Augustine: “Symbolum est regula fidei brevis et grandis: brevis numero verborum, grandis pondere sententiarum. A symbol is a rule of faith, both brief and grand: brief, as to the number of words; grand, as to the weight of its thoughts." Cyprian was the first who applied the term symbol

to the baptismal

confession,

because,

he said, it distinguished the Christians from non-Christians. Already at the beginning of the fourth century the Apostles’ Creed was universally called symbol; and in the Middle Ages this name was applied also to the Nicene and the Athanasian Creeds. In the Introduction to the Book of Concord the Lutheran eonfessors designate the Augsburg Confession as the “symbol of our faith," and in the Epit-

ome of the Formula of Concord, as “our symbol of this time." Symbols may be divided into the following elasses: 1. Ecumenical symbols, which, at least in the past, have been accepted by all Christendom, and are still formally acknowledged by most of the evangelieal Churches; 2. particular symbols, adopted by the various ..— denominations of divided Christendom; 3. private symbols, such as have been formulated and published by individuals, for example, Luther's Confession of the Lord's Supper of 1528. The publication of private confessions does not necessarily involve an impropriety; for aecording to Matt. 10, 32. 33 and 1 Pet. 3, 15 not only the Church

as a whole, but in-

dividual Christians as well are privileged and in duty bound to confess the Christian truth over against its public assailants. SelfL]

evidently, only such are symbols of particular churches as have been approved and adopted by them. The symbols of the Church, says the Formula

of Concord, *should not be based on

private writings, but on such books as have been composed, approved, and received in the name of the churches which pledge themselves to one doctrine and religion.” (Conc. TRIGL., 851, 2.) Not being formally and explicitly adopted by all Christians, the specifically Lutheran confessions also are generally regarded as partieular symbols. Inasmuch, however, as they are in complete agreement with Holy Scripture, and in this respect differ from all other partieular symbols, the Lutheran confessions are truly ecumenical and catholie in character. They contain the truths believed universally by true Christians everywhere, explicitly by all eonsistent Christians, implicitly even by inconsistent and erring Christians. Christian truth, being one and the same the world over, is none other than that which is found in the Lutheran confessions. 2. The

German

Book

of Concord.

The printing of the offieial German edition of the Book of Concord was begun in 1578, under the editorship of Jacob Andreae. The 25th of June, 1580, however, the fiftieth anni-

versary of the presentation of the Augsburg Confession to Emperor Charles V, was chosen as the date for its official publication at Dresden and its promulgation to the general public. Following are the contents of one of the five Dresden folio copies whieh we have compared: l. The title-page, concluding with the words, “Mit Churf. G. zu Sachsen Befreiung. Dresden MDLXXX." 2. The preface, as adopted and signed by the estates at Jueterbock in 1579, which supplanted the explanation, originally planned, of the theologians against the various attacks made upon the Formula of Concord. 3. The three Ecumenical Symbols. 4. The Augsburg Confession of 1530. 5. The Apology of 1530. 6. The Smalcald Articles of 1537, with the appendix, “Concerning the Power and Supremacy of the Pope.” 7. Luther’s Small Catechism, omitting the “Booklets of Marriage and Baptism,” found in some copies. 8. Luther’s Large Catechism. 9. The Formula of Concord, with separate title-pages for the Epitome and the Solida Declaratio, both dated 1580. 10. The signatures of the theologians, ete. amounting to about 8,000.